Sudan Patents

Sudan Patents:

Sudan is a member of the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) since April 16, 1984. The governmental body responsible of patent and IP in general is the Registrar General of Intellectual Property. Patents in Sudan are governed by the patents Act of 1971 and the patent Regulations of 1981.

Patenting procedures in Sudan:

· A copy of the application must be filed within 30 months of the claimed priority date. Both product and process claims are patentable.

·The patent will be examined with regard to compliance with the formalities and to unity of invention only.

·Upon the acceptance of a patent application, the applicant will be notified and invited to pay the publication fees, then the patent will be granted and the grant will be published in the official IP Gazette. Any refusal by the Registrar to grant a patent may be appealed before the court.

·Upon the acceptance of a PCT application, the applicant will be notified and invited to pay the registration fees and the patent will be granted without publication of the grant.

·A patent is valid in Sudan for 20 years from the filing date. Maintenance fees are due annually counting from the filing date. A 6-month grace period subject to a fine is allowed for late payment of an annuity. For PCT patents, the anniversary date of the annuity payments is calculated from the International filing date.

·An assignment of a patent shall have effect against third parties, only when it has been recorded at the Patent Office.

·Licenses may be exclusive or non-exclusive and must be recorded to be effective against third parties. Licenses involving payment of royalties abroad must be approved by the Attorney General prior to their recording.

In the event that the owner of a patented invention in Sudan does not satisfy the stipulated working requirements of the country within 4 years from the date of filing or 3 years from the date of grant, the patent will be subject to compulsory licensing under the provisions of the law

Requirements:

Filing Requirements:

1. A Power of Attorney signed and stamped by the applicant's seal, or otherwise duly notarized.

2. A certified copy of the certificate of incorporation of the applicant company and its articles of incorporation duly legalized up to the Sudanese Consulate. A certified and legalized translation is required, if the document is not in either English or Arabic.

3. Two copies of the patent specification and claims including an Arabic translation of the abstract of the invention.

4. Two sets of the formal drawings, if any.

5. A priority document, if priority is to be claimed.

For filing the national phase of a PCT application, the following additional information or documents are required:

1. PCT filing number and date.

2. Particulars of the application on the basis of which priority is claimed.

3. International publication number and date.

4. A certified copy of the PCT application.

5. A copy of the relative international publication and search report, if any.

Note: For filing the national phase of a PCT application, a certified copy of the Certificate of Incorporation of the applicant company is not required.

Assignment Applications

1. A Power of Attorney from the assignee and the assignor, both duly notarized.

2. A deed of assignment legalized up to the Sudanese Consulate accompanied by its duly legalized English translation, if not in English.

3. A certified extract of the entry of the assignee in the commercial register or a certificate of incorporation of the assignee, together with its English translation, duly legalized up to the Sudanese Consulate.

Change of Name/Address Applications

1. A Power of Attorney notarized and stamped with the company's seal.

2. A certified copy of the change of name and or address certificate in the home country duly legalized up to the Sudanese Consulate. If not in Arabic or English, a sworn translation in either language of the document should be provided duly legalized up to the Sudanese Consulate

Laws:

The Patent Act 1971

THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE SUDAN

THE PATENTS ACT

(Act No. 58 of 1971)

(The purpose of this Act is to encourage inventiveness through adequate protection of inventions and technical know-how)

Be it Hereby Enacted by the Council of Ministers in Accordance with the Presidential Decree No.1 as follows:

PART I

PRELIMINARY PROVISIONS

CHAPTER I

Article 1

This Act may be cited as "The Patents Act, 1971."

Article 2

In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires:

a) "The Court" means the High Court;

b) "Minister" means the Attorney General;

c) "Patent Office" means the Office that the Minister shall establish to perform the functions assigned to it under this Act.

CHAPTER II

Terms of Patentability

Article 3

(1) Any invention which is new, involves an inventive step and is capable of industrial application shall be patentable.

(2) Any invention constituting an improvement upon a patented invention shall be patentable if it is new, involves an inventive step and is capable of industrial application.

(3) Principles and discoveries of a scientific nature shall not be considered to be inventions.

Article 4

(1) An invention is new if it is not anticipated by prior art, prior art being constituted by everything disclosed to the public, anywhere and at any time whatsoever, by means of a written or oral disclosure, by use, or in any other way, before the date of the filing of the patent application or the priority date validly claimed in respect thereof.

(2) An invention shall not be deemed to have been made available to the public solely by reason of the fact that, within the period of six months preceding the filing of the application for a patent, the inventor or his successor has exhibited the invention in a recognized international exhibition.

Article 5

An invention shall be considered as involving an inventive step if it does not obviously follow from the state of the art, either as to the method, the application, the combination of methods, or the products which it concerns, or as to the industrial results it produces.

Article 6

An invention shall be considered as capable of industrial application if it can be

manufactured or used in any kind of industry, including agriculture.

Article 7

Patents may not be validly obtained in respect of inventions the publication of working of which would be contrary to public order or morality, provided that the working of an invention shall not be considered as contrary to public order or morality merely because such working is prohibited by law or regulation.

CHAPTER III

Right to the Grant of a Patent

Article 8

(1) Subject to Section 10, the right to a patent shall belong to the invention or his successor in title.

(2) If two or more persons have jointly made an invention, the right to a patent shall belong to them or their successors in title jointly and equally; a person who has merely assisted in the execution of an invention without having contributed any inventive activity shall not, however, be deemed to be an inventor or co-inventor.

(3) The person who is the first to file an application for a patent, or is the first validly to claim the earliest priority for an application for the same invention, shall, subject to the provisions of sections 9 and 10, be deemed to be the inventor or successor in title of the inventor.

Article 9

Where the applicant has obtained the essential elements of an invention which is the subject of his application from the invention of another person, without the latter having consented to the applicant's doing so and to his filing an application for a patent, the person whose invention has the patent granted in respect of the application, may be transferred to him.

Article10

(1) Subject to the legal provisions governing commission and employment contracts, and in the absence of contractual provisions to the contrary, the right to a patent for an invention made in execution of such a contract shall belong to the person having commissioned the work or to the employer.

(2) The preceding subsection shall apply when an employment contract does not require the employee to exercise any inventive activity, but when the employee has made the invention using data or means made available to him through his employment.

(3) In the circumstances provided for in subsection (2), the employee-inventor shall have a right to remuneration taking into account his salary and the importance of the patented invention, which remuneration shall, in the absence of agreement between the parties, be fixed by the Court. In the circumstances provided for in subsection (1), the employee-inventor shall have a similar right if the invention is of very exceptional importance and the employment contract requires the exercise of inventive activity.

(4) The advantages conferred on the employee-inventor by the provisions of the preceding subsection shall not be reduced by contract.

Article 11.

(1) The true inventor shall be entitled to be named as such in the patent.

(2) The preceding subsection may not be contravened by contract.

CHAPTER IV

GRANT OF PATENT

Article 12

(1) An application for a patent shall be made to the Patent Office and shall

contain:

(a) the complete name and address of the applicant and, if the applicant's address is outside the Democratic Republic of the Sudan, the indication of an address for service within the Democratic Republic of the Sudan;

(b) a description of the invention with the drawings, if any, referred to therein;

(c) one or more claims.

(2) Where appropriate, the application for the patent shall be accompanied by a declaration, signed by the true inventor, requesting that he be mentioned as such in the patent and giving his name and address.

(3) Where the application is made by an agent, it shall be accompanied by a signed power of attorney; authentication or certification of the signature shall not be necessary.

(4) The details of the formal requirements with which an application for a patent must comply shall be prescribed in the Regulations.

13. (1) The description shall disclose the invention in a manner sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by a person skilled in the art.

(2) The claim or claims shall define the matter for which protection is sought.

(3) The claims shall not exceed the contents of the description.

14. (1) An application for a patent shall relate to one invention only.

(2) Subject to the preceding subsection, an application for a patent may include, in particular:

(a) apart from claims for one or more products, claims for one more manufacturing processes for the product or products, and claims for one or more applications of the product or products;

(b) apart from claims for one or more manufacturing processes, claims for means of working the process or processes, claims for the product or products which result from that working, and claims for the application of such products.

15. The applicant for a patent who wishes to avail himself of the priority of an earlier application made in another country shall be required to append to his application a written declaration indicating the date and number of the earlier application, the country in which he or his predecessor in title made such application and the name of the applicant, and shall, within a period of three months from the date of the later application, furnish a copy of the earlier application, certified as correct by the Patent Office of the country where it was made.

16. An application for a patent shall not be accepted unless the fee prescribed for this effect has been paid.

17. (1) The Patent Office shall examine the application as to its conformity with Sections 12, 14, 15 and 16.

(2) Where the provisions of Sections 12 or 16 have not been complied with, patent shall not be granted; where the provisions of Section 15 have not been complied with, the Patent Office shall not mention in the patent the priority claimed.

(3) Where the application does not fulfill the requirements of Section 14, the applicant shall be invited by the Patent office to restrict the application so that it relates to only one invention. As the same time, the Patent Office shall notify the applicant that, within a period of three months, he may file, for the rest of the application, one or more divisional applications, which shall benefit from the date of the filing of the original application, and, if relevant, from the priority date claimed under Section 15. No patent shall be granted where the applicant does not comply with this invitation to restrict the original application to one invention.

18. (1) Where the examination referred to in Section 17 shows that the application satisfies the requirements of Sections 12, 14, and 16, the patent, as applied for, shall be granted without further examination, of the question whether the subject of the application is patentable within the terms of Sections 3 to 7, and whether, for the same invention, an application benefiting from an earlier priority has been made in the Democratic Republic of the Sudan or whether a patent has been granted as a result of such application.

(2) Where the examination referred to in Section 17 shows that the provisions of Section 15 have been completed with, the Patent Office shall mention in the patent the priority claimed.

(3) Patents are granted at the risk of the patentee and without guarantee as to their validity.

19. (1) A patent shall be granted by the issuance of letters patent to the patentee.

The patent must contain the number thereof in order of grant; the name and address of the patentee and, if his address is outside the Democratic Republic of the Sudan, an address for service in the Democratic Republic of the Sudan; the dates of the application and grant; indication, if priority is claimed, of this fact, and the number, date and country of the application, basis of the priority claimed; the description of the invention, the claims and the drawings, the name and address of the true inventor if he has requested to be mentioned in the patent.

(2) The Patent Office shall maintain a Register in which shall be recorded patents granted, numbered in their order of grant, and, in regard to each patent, where appropriate, its lapse for non-payment of annual fees, and all transactions to be recorded by virtue of the present Act.

(3) The Patent Office shall record the changes of address or of address for service which shall be notified to it by the registered owner of the patent.

(4) Communications to be made to the registered owner of the patent by virtue of the present Act shall be sent to him at his most recently recorded address and at the same time to his most recently recorded address for service.

20. (1) The Patent Office shall publish in the Gazette as soon as possible all patents granted in the order of their grant, mentioning the contents of the patent in accordance with Section 19 (1), with the exception of the description and the drawings. The publication of the claims of the patent may, to the extent permitted and in the manner prescribed in the Regulations, be replaced by a summary of the claims, without prejudice to the scope of the patent and its validity.

(2) Patents registered at the Patent Office may be consulted free of charge at that Office, and any person may obtain copies thereof at his own expense. This provision shall also be applicable to transactions recorded in regard to any patent.

CHAPTER V

RIGHTS CONFERRED BY THE PATENT

21. The patent shall confer upon its registered owner the right to preclude third

parties from the following acts:

(a) When the patent has been granted in respect of a product:

(i) making, importing, offering for sale, selling, and using the product,

(ii) stocking such product for the purposes of offering for sale, selling, or using;

(b) When the patent has been granted in respect of a process:

(i) applying the process,

(ii) doing any of the acts referred to in (a) above in respect to a product obtained directly by means of the process.

22. (1) The scope of the protection conferred by the patent shall be determined by the terms of the claims.

(2) The description and the drawings included in the patent shall be used to interpret the claims.

23. (1) The rights under a patent shall only extend to acts done for industrial or commercial purposes.

(2) The rights under a patent shall not extend to acts in respect of the product covered by the patent after the product has been lawfully sold in the Democratic Republic of the Sudan; nevertheless, insofar as the patent also concerns a special application of the product, this application shall continue to be reserved to the registered owner of the patent.

24. Any person who, at the date of the filing of the patent application by another person, or at the date of priority claimed in respect of such validly application, was, in good faith, manufacturing the product or applying the

process, which is the subject of the invention, or had made serious preparations with a view to such manufacture or use, shall, despite the patent, have the right to continue such acts and, with respect to products obtained thereby, to perform the other acts referred to in Section 21. This right is beneficiary of the right.

CHAPTER VI

DURATION OF PATENT AND FEES

25. (1) A patent shall expire at the end of the twentieth year from the date of the

filing of the application, subject to the payment of the annual fees as

prescribed in the Regulations.

(2) A period of grace of six months shall be granted for the payment of the annual fees upon payment of a surcharge as prescribed in the Regulations.

(3) The lapse of a patent for non-payment of fees shall be published in the Gazette by the Patent Office as soon as possible

CHAPTER VII

Transfer of Patent Applications and Patents; Joint Ownership of Patents

26. (1) Patent applications and patents may be assigned or transferred by succession.

(2) The assignment of patent applications and patents shall be made in writing and shall require the signatures of the contracting parties.

(3) Assignments, or transfers by succession, of patent applications and patents shall be registered in the Patent Office on payment of a fee as prescribed in the Regulations

27. In the absence of any provision to the contrary between the parties, joint owners of a patent may, separately, transfer their parts, exploit the patented invention, and exercise the rights granted under Section 21, but may only jointly grant a license to a third party to exploit the patent.

CHAPTER VIII

CONTRACTUAL LICENSES

28. (1) The applicant for or owner of a patent may, by contract, grant to some other person or undertaking a license to exploit his invention.

(2) A license contract must be in writing and shall require the signatures of the contracting parties.

(3) Every license contract must be registered in the Patent Office, on payment of a fee as prescribed in the Regulations. the license shall have no effect against third parties until such registration.

29. (1) In the absence of any provision to the contrary in the license contract, the grant of a license shall not prevent the licensor from granting further licenses to third persons, or from exploiting the invention himself.

(2) The grant of an exclusive license shall prevent the licensor from granting licenses to third persons and, in the absence of any provision to the contrary in the license contract, from exploiting the invention himself.

30. In the absence of any provision to the contrary in the license contract, the licensee shall be entitled to exploit the invention during the whole duration of the patent, in the entire territory of the Democratic Republic of the Sudan, through any application of the invention, and in respect to all the acts referred to in Section 21.

31. In the absence of any provision to the contrary in the license contract, a license contract shall not be assignable to third parties and the license shall not be entitled to grant sublicenses.

32. In view of the country's needs and its economic development, the Minister may, by order, provide that on pain of invalidity, license contracts or certain categories of them, and amendments or renewals of such contracts, which

involve the payment o royalties abroad, shall require his previous approval.

33. (1) Clauses in license contracts or relating to such contracts shall be null and void insofar as they impose upon the licensee, in the industrial or commercial field, restrictions not deriving from the rights conferred by the patent.

(2) The following in particular shall be deemed not to constitute such restrictions:

(a) limitations concerning the degree, extent, quantity, territory or duration of exploitation of the subject of the patent;

(b) limitations justified by the interest of the licensor in the technically flawless exploitation of the subject of the patent;

(c) the obligation imposed upon the licensee to abstain from all acts capable of impeding or preventing the grant of the patent or prejudicing its validity.

CHAPTER IX

COMPULSORY LICENSES

34. (1) At any time after the expiration of a period of four years from the date of the filing of an application for a patent, or three years from the date of the grant of a patent, whichever period expires last, any person interested may, in accordance with the conditions specified in Section 44, apply for the grant of a compulsory license upon one or more of the following grounds;

(a) that the patented invention, capable of being worked within the Democratic Republic of the Sudan does not meet on reasonable terms the demand for the product;

(b) that the working of the patented invention within the Democratic Republic of the Sudan is being prevented or hindered by the importation of the patented Article;

(c) that the working of the patented invention within the Democratic Republic of the Sudan is being prevented or hindered by the importation of the patented Article;

(d) that, by reason of the refusal of the registered owner of the patent to grant licenses on reasonable terms, the establishment or development of industrial or commercial activities in the Democratic Republic of the Sudan is unfairly and substantially prejudiced.

(2) In all the above cases, a compulsory license shall not be granted if the owner of the patent proves that his actions in respect of the patented invention are legitimately justifiable in the circumstances. Importation shall not constitute a legitimate reason.

(3) The working of a patented invention under this Section means the manufacture of a patented Article, the application of a patented process, or the manufacture of a patented machine, by an effective and serious establishment existing within the Democratic Republic of the Sudan, and on a scale which is adequate and reasonable in the circumstances.

(4) A compulsory license shall permit the licensee to perform some or all the acts referred to in Section 21 with the exception of importation.

35. The Minister may, by order, provide that, for certain patented products or processes, or for certain categories of such products and processes, which are declared by that order of vital importance for the defense or the economy

of the Democratic Republic of the Sudan of for public health, compulsory licenses may be granted, in the conditions provided for in Section 34, even before the expiration of the period mentioned in subsection (1) of that Section and even for importation into the Democratic Republic of the Sudan.

36. (1) If an invention protected by a patent within the Democratic Republic of the Sudan cannot be worked without infringing rights deriving from a patent granted on a prior application or benefiting from an earlier priority, a compulsory license may, upon application, be granted under the conditions specified in Section 44 to the registered owner of the later patent, to the extent necessary for the working of his invention, insofar as such invention serves industrial purposes different from those of the invention forming the subject of the earlier patent, or constitutes noteworthy technical progress in relation to it.

(2) If the two inventions serve the same industrial purpose, a compulsory license shall be granted only if a license is granted in respect of the later patent to the registered owner of the earlier patent, if he so requests.

37. Any person who applies for a compulsory license under Sections 34, 35 or 36 must furnish proof showing that he has previously approached the registered owner of the patent, by registered letter, requesting a contractual patent, by registered letter, requesting a contractual license, but has been unable to obtain such a license from him on reasonable terms and within a reasonable time.

38. In the cases provided for in Sections 34 and 35, a compulsory license shall

be granted only to an applicant offering the necessary guarantees to work the

invention sufficiently to remedy the deficiencies or to satisfy the

requirements which gave rise to the application for the compulsory license.

39. (1) Compulsory licenses shall be non-exclusive.

(2) The terms of a compulsory license, fixed in accordance with Section 44, may contain obligations and restrictions both for the licensee and for the registered owner of the patent.

40. A compulsory license shall only be granted subject to the payment of adequate royalties commensurate with the extent to which the invention is worked.

41. (1) A compulsory license may only be transferred with the undertaking of the licensee or with that portion of his undertaking which uses the patented invention. Any such transfer shall on invalidity require the authorization of the authority which granted the compulsory license.

(2) Sections 42 and 44 shall be applicable to the transfer of a compulsory license.

42. Every compulsory license shall, either at the request of the interested party or

following notification to the Patent Office provides for in subsection 44(4), be registered at the Patent Office without fee. The license shall have no effect as against third parties until such registration.

43. (1) Upon the request of the registered owner of the patent or of the licensee of the compulsory license, the terms of the license may be amended by the authority which granted it when new facts so justify, in particular when the registered owner of the patent grants contractual licenses on terms more favorable to the contractual licensees.

(2) At the request of the registered owner of the patent, the compulsory license may be canceled if the licensee does not comply with the prescribed terms of the license or if the conditions which justified the grant of the compulsory license have ceased to exist; in the latter case, a reasonable time shall be given to the licensee to cease working the invention it an immediate stoppage would cause serious damage to him.

(3) Sections 42 and 44 shall be applicable to the amendment and cancellation of compulsory licenses.

44. (1) Any application for a compulsory license shall be made to the Court.

(2) The Registrar of the Court shall invite, by registered letter, the applicant for the compulsory license and the registered owner of the patent to appear or to be represented before the Court within a reasonable time; the Court shall hear the party or parties or their representatives who have appeared. Before granting a compulsory license, the Court shall seek the advice of the Minister, who may delegate a representative to intervene at the hearing and to make any pertinent observations.

(3) The Court shall first decide whether a compulsory license may be granted. If it finds that it may be granted, it will give the parties reasonable time to agree on the terms. If there is no agreement between the parties when the time limit expires, the Court shall fix the terms, Section 40. The terms of a compulsory license, including those relating to royalties, shall be considered to constitute a valid contract between the parties.

(4) The decision of the Court granting a compulsory license shall be notified by the Registrar of the Court to each of the parties involved and to the Patent Office.

CHAPTER X

LICENSES OF RIGHT

45. (1) Any registered owner of a patent not precluded by the terms of any

previously registered license from granting further licenses may apply to the Patent Office to have, in respect of his patent, the mention "licenses of right" entered in the Register. The mention shall be entered in the Register, and this fact shall be published by the Patent Office as soon as possible.

(2) The entry of this mention in the Register shall entitle any person to obtain a license to exploit the said patent upon such terms as shall, in the absence of agreement, be fixed by the Court.

(3) The amount of the annual fees payable in respect of any patent after the date on which the mention "licenses of right" has been entered in the Register shall be reduced by one half.

(4) The registered owner of the patent may, at any time, apply to the Patent Office to the entry "licenses of rights". If no license is in force, or if all licensees agree thereto, the Patent Office shall cancel the entry, after payment of all fees and annual fees which would have been payable if the entry had not been made in the Register.

(5) The provisions of Sections 28 (3), 30, 32 and 33, shall be applicable equally to licenses of right.

(6) The grantee of a license of right may neither assign it nor grant sub licenses under it.

CHAPTER XI

SURRENDER AND NULLITY

46. (1) A patent may be surrendered by its registered owner by written declaration addressed to the Patent Office.

(2) The surrender may be limited to one or more claims of the patent.

(3) The surrender shall be immediately registered and published by the Patent Office. Surrender shall be effective only after it has been registered.

(4) It a contractual license or a license of right is registered at the Patent Office, surrender of the patent shall only be registered upon the submission of declaration by which the registered licensee consents to the surrender.

47. (1) On the request of any person including any competent authority, the Court shall declare a patent null and void in the following circumstances:

(a) where the subject of the patent is not patentable within the terms of Sections 3 to 7;

(b) where the description of the invention or the claim or claims in the patent do not satisfy the requirements of Section 13;

(c) where, for the same invention, a patent has been granted in the Democratic Republic of the Sudan as the result of a prior application or of an application benefiting from an earlier priority.

(2) Where the provisions of the preceding superaction affect only part of the patent, nullity shall be declared in the form of a corresponding limitation of the claim of claims of the patent.

(3) The Court may require the registered owner of the patent to submit it for the purpose of examination.

(a) the list of publications or earlier patents which may have been referred to in connection with either a patent application filed for the same invention by the registered owner himself or his predecessor in title with the Patent Office of another country or any proceedings relating to the patent in question;

(b) the list of publications or patents mentioned in any report sent to the registered wonder of the patent or his predecessor in title by a governmental or intergovernmental search institute.

48. (1) A patent declared to be null and void shall be regarded as having been null and void from the date of its grant. Nevertheless, where licenses have been granted, nullity shall not entail the repayment of royalties by the licensee insofar as he has effectively profited from the license.

(2) When the declaration of nullity becomes final, the Registrar of the Court shall notify it to the Patent Office which shall enter it in the Register and publish it as soon as possible.

CHAPTER XII

INFRINGEMENT OF RIGHTS UNDER THE PATENT

49. (1) A registered owner of a patent whose rights under Sections 21 and 22 are threatened with infringement, or are infringed, may institute legal proceedings designed to prevent the infringement or to prohibit its continuation.

(2) In the case of infringement of these rights, the registered owner of the patent may also claim damages and the application of any other sanctions provided for in the civil law, such as seizure and destruction of the infringing products or machinery used for the making of such products.

50. (1) Any intentional infringement of the rights of a registered owner of a patent under Sections 21 and 22 shall constitute an offense.

(2) Such offense shall be punishable by a fine not exceeding one thousand Pounds or by imprisonment not exceeding one year, or both. The maximum penalties shall be doubled in the event of recidivism, i.e. when, in the course of the five preceding years, the offender has been convicted of another infringement of a patent.

51. If a patent is in respect of a process for the manufacture of a new product,

the same product, manufactured by a third party, shall, in the absence of

proof to the contrary, be presumed to have been manufactured by that

process.

52. (1) Any licensee under a contractual or compulsory license, of a license of right, may, by registered letter, require the licensor to introduce the legal actions necessary to obtain civil or penal sanctions in respect of any infringement of the patent indicated by the licensee.

(2) If the licensor refuses or neglects to introduce the said legal actions within three months of the request, the licensee under the registered license may introduce them in his own name, without prejudice to the right of the licensor to intervene in such actions.

PART II

TECHNICAL KNOW-HOW

53. (1) Subject to any right conferred by patents in force and the provisions of subsection (2) of the present Section, any person may freely use manufacturing processes or knowledge concerning the use and application of industrial techniques.

(2) Nevertheless, provided that these processes and knowledge have not been published or made available to the public, they shall be protected against unlawful use, disclosure or communication by third parties, on condition that the person who has developed them has taken the necessary steps to preserve their secret character.

54. Any use, disclosure or communication, without the consent of the owner, of the processes and knowledge referred to in Section 53 (2) by any person who is aware of their secret character, or who could not fail to be aware of such character, shall be deemed to be unlawful, and Sections 49 and 50 shall be applicable in respect of those unlawful acts.

55. Any person who has developed, by his own means, manufacturing processes or knowledge concerning the use and application of industrial techniques and any person who has legally acquired those processes and knowledge, be entitled to use, disclose or communicate them to third parties.

56. (1) The processes and knowledge referred to in subsections (1) and (2) of Section 53 may be transferred and may form the subject of a license contract.

(2) Sections 26 (2), 28(2), 29, 30, 31 and 32 shall be applicable by analogy.

PART III

GENERAL PROVISIONS

57. If an enterprise commits an infringement under this Act, any person acting as a member of the Administration Board, as Director General or Secretary, or any person having a similar activity or who appears to be the executor of such task in that enterprise on the date of the infringement, shall be considered to be an infringer unless he provides proof that the relevant infringement had not been committed with his best efforts to avoid the infringement within the limits of his competence under the given circumstances in effect.

58. The Minister may prescribe Regulations in order to perform the purposes of this Act, once the Minister of the Treasury and the Minister of Economy, Commerce and Supply have approved the prescribed fees

    • POA (go to the atachment below)